Crawford S Y, Myers C E
Department of Pharmacy Administration, College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois, Chicago.
Am J Hosp Pharm. 1993 Jul;50(7):1371-404.
The results of a national mail survey of pharmaceutical services in community hospitals conducted by ASHP during summer 1992 are reported and compared with the results of earlier ASHP surveys. A simple random sample of community hospitals (short-term, nonfederal) was selected from community hospitals registered by the American Hospital Association. Questionnaires were mailed to each director of pharmacy. The adjusted gross sample size was 889. The net response rate was 58% (518 usable replies). The average number of hours of pharmacy operation per week was 105. Complete unit dose drug distribution was offered by 90% of the respondents, and 67% offered complete, comprehensive i.v. admixture programs. A total of 73% of the hospitals had centralized pharmaceutical services. Some 83% provided services to ambulatory-care patients, including clinic patients, emergency room patients, patients being discharged, employees, home care patients, and the general public. A computerized pharmacy system was present in 75% of the departments, and 86% had at least one microcomputer. More than 90% participated in adverse drug reaction, drug-use evaluation, drug therapy monitoring, and medication error management programs. Two thirds of the respondents regularly provided written documentation of pharmacist interventions in patients' medical records, and the same proportion provided patient education or counseling. One third provided drug management of medical emergencies. One fifth provided drug therapy management planning, and 17% provided written histories. Pharmacokinetic consultations were provided by 57% and nutritional support consultations by 37%; three fourths of pharmacist recommendations were adopted by prescribers. A well-controlled formulary system was in place in 51% of the hospitals; therapeutic interchange was practiced by 69%. A total of 99% participated in group purchasing, and 95% used a prime vendor. The 1992 ASHP survey revealed a continuation of the changes in many hospital-based pharmaceutical services documented in earlier surveys (e.g., growth in clinical services, ambulatory-care services, computerization) and identified static areas that merit the attention of pharmacy leaders (e.g., provision of complete, comprehensive i.v. services).
美国卫生系统药师协会(ASHP)于1992年夏季开展了一项针对社区医院药学服务的全国性邮寄调查,现将调查结果予以报告,并与ASHP早期调查结果进行比较。从美国医院协会登记的社区医院(短期、非联邦性质)中选取了一个社区医院的简单随机样本。问卷邮寄给了每位药房主任。调整后的总样本量为889家。净回复率为58%(518份有效回复)。每周药房运营的平均时长为105小时。90%的受访者提供完整的单剂量药品调配服务,67%提供完整、全面的静脉药物混合配制方案。共有73%的医院设有集中药学服务。约83%的医院为门诊护理患者提供服务,包括门诊患者、急诊室患者、出院患者、员工、家庭护理患者及普通公众。75%的科室配备了计算机化药房系统,86%至少拥有一台微型计算机。超过90%的医院参与了药物不良反应、用药评估、药物治疗监测及用药错误管理项目。三分之二的受访者定期在患者病历中提供药师干预的书面记录,同样比例的受访者提供患者教育或咨询服务。三分之一的受访者提供医疗紧急情况的药物管理。五分之一的受访者提供药物治疗管理规划,17%提供用药记录。57%的受访者提供药代动力学咨询,37%提供营养支持咨询;四分之三的药师建议被开处方者采纳。51%的医院建立了管控良好的处方集系统;69%的医院实行治疗性药品替换。共有99%的医院参与集中采购,95%使用主要供应商。1992年ASHP的调查显示,早期调查记录的许多医院药学服务变化仍在持续(如临床服务、门诊护理服务、计算机化的增长),同时也发现了值得药学领导者关注的停滞领域(如提供完整、全面的静脉服务)。